canon

Canon 1D Mark IV Joins the Nigh-Vision Club, This Time With Full HD Video


Less than a week after Nikon wowed with its D3S, with previously unseen light sensitivity up to ISO 102,400, Canon has unveiled their own night-vision pro DSLR, the 1D Mark IV. But where the D3S falls short in the video department, the 1D Mark IV pushes things forward.

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Canon to announce successor to 1Ds Mark III tonight?

Update: New specs formally announced revealed at Canon's website!

Camera maker Canon is widely tipped to make a global announcement of a new flagship D-SLR camera at its Reflexion industry event tonight at 6.30pm. The latest rumoured is that the long-awaited replacement of the landscaping super-gun, the 1Ds Mark III, will be skipping over “Mark IV” entirely because of the phonetic similarities of the word “four” to “death” in the Japanese (and Chinese) language. So will the photographic world be introduced to the 1D Mark V tonight?

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Hands-On Preview: Canon 7D Blends Pro-Level Photo Features With More HD Video Options


Canon EOS 7D:  John Mahoney
Although Nikon was the first to market with HD capture for its DSLRs, Canon has arguably pushed things further forward with the full-frame, 1080p-capable 5D Mark II and sub-$1,000 Rebel T1i. The brand new 7D is the next step--enhancing the movie mode with video geeks' most wanted features, while at the same time integrating features from their top-end 1Ds Mark III family, giving would-be photo pros plenty to covet.

Is this the camera that finally puts the semi-pro digital camcorder firmly in its grave?

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Old Flatbed Scanner + 50mm Lens = Amazing 130-Megapixel Scancam

And it helps that its creator is a great photographer

Tinkerers have been turning flatbed scanners into cameras for a while, but this version by a Japanese modder is one of the finest I've seen--both in technical execution and the incredible quality of the massive 130-megapixel images it creates.

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Canon Brings HD to Budget SLR

New Rebel T1i goes up to 1080p, sorta

We all swooned when Canon brought 1080p video recording to the Eos 5D Mark II cameras and showed off the gorgeous footage. But unless you're a pro photographer who can get a tax write-off for it, how likely are you to shell out $2700 for the Mark II? Now, Canon brings HD goodness to the entry level with the $800 Rebel T1i. (Fortunately, Canon's products are more user-friendly than their names are.)

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Best Digital Cameras : Sony DSLR Camera Image Sensor

Who makes the best digital cameras? Can Sony really mix it with the DSLR heavy weights Canon and Nikon?

Who makes the best digital cameras?

DxO Labs does something quite tricky: Quantifies the quality of an image sensor's performance, so you can look at a neat number grade for a quick gauge. Surprisingly, a Sony DSLR bests equivalent Canon models.

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Canon Go For a Splash with the PowerShot D10

Perhaps -10 degree C environments are more your cup of tea though? Canon still has you covered

Whether you want to go for a splash at the beach or head to the snow, you’ll be covered with Canon PowerShot D10. “This exciting new addition to the PowerShot range has been custom built for flawless outdoor and underwater photography,” said Kimberley Langton from Canon Australia. “The PowerShot D10 packs in an impressive armory of features, including Waterproof to 10m deep, Freeze proof to -10°C and Shockproof to more than 1m, all in a fun, user-friendly design.”

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Middleweight Camera Championship

A showdown of smaller “big” cameras from Canon, Olympus, and Panasonic

Size is an issue with cameras. I miss a lot of good shots when I don’t feel like lugging around a hefty SLR (such as my current fav, the Nikon D90). And while my pocket camera (presently a Canon SD800) is easy to tote, the image quality is more for “snapshots” than “photographs.”

I, and a few other shutterbugs around the Popular Science office, have been looking into the middle category of cameras: big enough to take good pictures, but not so big that it’s a burden. Now is a good time to look, since several camera makers have fresh midsize camera offerings.

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Canon G10: SLR Takes a Holiday

Our staff photographer puts down his pro rig and discovers the joys of a point-and-shoot

I’m an old-school SLR guy. I like big, heavy cameras that I can swing from the shoulder strap to scare thugs away. So I was pretty skeptical of a point-and-shoot, even a high-end model.

But when the 14.7-megapixel Canon G10 arrived, I was surprised at how sturdy it is (and still slips into my shirt pocket!). Without glancing at the instruction manual, I popped in the battery and a little SD card from my wife’s point-and-shoot and headed out. Right away I was thrown back to being eleven years old again, taking pictures just because I could. It was pure joy.

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Canon's Latest Gun

Canon's new digital SLR camera introduces HD video and more into the mix

Canon has officially released the specifications of its much anticipated EOS 5D Mark II digital SLR camera ahead of the Photokina conference.

The key features are:

· 35mm full-frame CMOS sensor with 21.1 megapixels
· Live View movies in Full High Definition
· Live View shooting (AF mode: Quick, Live, Live Face Detection)
· DiG!C 4 Image Processor
· ISO speed range 100-6400 (expandable to 50-25600) (Canon first)
· 3.9 frames per second (fps) with continuous shooting up to 78 shots in a single burst
· Newly designed, high-performance viewfinder (viewfinder coverage 98%)

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How We Tested Autofocus

Details of how we pushed the latest SLRs from Nikon and Olympus

There is no single measure of autofocus ability, so we did two main tests to judge the cameras chops. The first was to see how well each camera performed in difficult situations: low light and subjects with very little detail. In the second, we picked subjects that are easy to get in focus and simply measured how fast each camera could do it.

This was our setup:

Lenses

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The Grouse: The Inkjet Refill Racket

Why I've given up on the world's most expensive fluid

Running on Empty: At up to $8,000 per gallon, inkjet ink is among the most expensive liquids by volume one can buy  Jonathan Wilson

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Old Cam, New Tricks

Unlock your Canon digital camera's hidden features by replacing its firmware with a hacked version

CHDK Firmware: Displaying the alternate main menu.  Luis Bruno
Camera makers love the incremental update: selling a new model with just enough enhancements that you'll be tempted to trade up. But if you own one of several Canon point-and-shoots, you can get new features, such as shooting in high-quality RAW format, measuring accurate exposures via a live histogram, and even running simple applications like games or a calendar, without having to pay for an upgrade. All you need to do is replace your firmware, the computer code embedded in the camera's memory that serves as its operating system.

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Shaken, Not Blurred

The newest pocket cams use stabilization to save you from your shaky hands

The smaller your camera, the more susceptible it is to even the slightest tremble, which can leave your photos looking like Impressionist paintings. Fortunately, optical image stabilization has trickled down from pro cams to the shake-prone pocket models. The cameras use motion sensors to detect any quiver and move a piece of the lens to compensate for it. I tested three in the most blur-inducing scenarios: in low light without a flash-the slow shutter speed gives you more time to twitch-and at full zoom, which magnifies shake.

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Canon Powershot SD550 Digital Elph

The Best Pocket Shooter

Never mind the business-card size of Canon's SD550 -check out its stunning images. The SD550 sports a powerful processor, borrowed from Canon's digital SLRs, that shoots quicker, processes images faster, and reproduces truer colors than ever before. Add in a 2.5-inch LCD, and it's the ideal go-everywhere camera.7.1MP; 2.2 x 3.5 x 1.1 inches; f2.8â€4.9 3x optical zoom (37mmâ€111mm, 35mm equivalent); 60fps video; $500

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